Submitted by: Mike Spindell, guest blogger
One of America’s greatest novels in my opinion is “The Great Gatsby” and I think many literary critics feel the same. If you’re not familiar with it, the short synopsis is that it is the tale of Jay Gatsby, a mysterious figure of self made wealth who arrives on Long Island’s North Shore, known as the “Gold Coast”, back in the “Roaring Twenties”. His life intertwines with Tom and Daisy Buchanan, a “golden” young couple with inherited wealth and the best social pedigrees. The interplay between these three leads to ultimate tragedy for Gatsby and more than a few other characters swept into the social vortex surrounding the Buchanan’s. On the last page of this magnificently crafted book, by F. Scott Fitzgerald, the narrator Nick runs into Tom and Daisy who are gaily embarking on a trip to Europe after some cataclysmic events of their causing and he says of them:
“They were careless people, Tom and Daisy — they smashed up things and creatures and then retreated back into their money or their vast carelessness or whatever it was that kept them together, and let other people clean up the mess they had made.”
Now lest you think I’m about to deliver a polemic about all wealthy people let me disabuse you of that notion. I know and have known many wealthy people who were also exemplary human beings and have my respect and affection. “The Rich” I refer to are people like the Koch Brothers who were born into great wealth and somehow believe they are among the anointed of the world. So strong is that belief that they are willing to do just about anything to maintain their power in this world and their anger at those who oppose them is the “righteous” anger of the permanently entitled. These groups of people generally have fortunes beginning in the hundreds of millions of dollars, Mitt Romney perhaps, and are far removed from the merely wealthy. The see themselves as Aristocrats of the world and in reality they would like to return us to the time of feudalism. In some respects we have returned, when we think of our Justice Department refusing to criminally prosecute banks like HSBC, which has admitted to partaking in clearly illegal activities. The germ for this guest blog came from a link supplied by one of our most prolific commenters. What it shows, I think with great effectiveness, is how the Rich are not like the rest of us and why they need to be stopped before they will destroy us and our country with it.
The article that set me off was linked by a long time regular here and part time defender of Ayn Rand, our own contributor Bron. It comes from an article written in the American Conservative Magazine and is titled: “Revolt of the Rich” by Mike Lofgren. Many Americans are taken in by the political memes generated pitting “liberals” against “conservatives” and by the stereotypes of each position handed down to us via the Mainstream Media. Much of today’s insanity in Washington arose with the election of Ronald Reagan, who ironically would be a Republican moderate, afraid of a primary challenge, in today’s skewed political spectrum. When Reagan won in 1980, his success frightened many of the Democratic Politicians to such an extent that the Right Wing of the Democratic Party assumed control of its “center stage” and there was a rush by many career Democratic politicians to begin to act like moderate Republicans. Then the wise men Democratic Party’s being emulated became Senators Daniel Moynihan, Harry Byrd and Jay Rockefeller. Byrd had been a “Dixiecrat”, Moynihan had worked loyally for Nixon and Jay Rockefeller…..was a Rockefeller. As the Democratic Party rushed to become Republican “Lite” its minions began to recognize that they could gain even more largesse from the Corporate Plutocrats as they moderated their ideals. The truth about politics is that “ideals” in most instances play a secondary role to personal gain and the pleasures of power. This shift “rightward” has proceeded apace for some thirty-two years. Even Democratic Presidential victories have brought us two Centrist two-term Presidents. While I admit I voted for each twice, it was definitely votes for what I saw as the lesser of two evils.
With the political shift rightward and with the infestation of the urgent need to raise massive amounts of cash in order to stay in office, our political leaders have become increasingly beholden to those who are the wealthiest among us. Indeed the evidence shows that the top .01 percent has separated itself from the rest of to such a great degree that to be a millionaire is to be middle class. To be “middle class” is to exist two, or three missed paychecks away from poverty. Even the small business people, who used to be the backbone of this country, are being squeezed by large corporations like Wal-Mart, who are not satisfied with the lion’s share of the market, but want it all.
Most Americans took pride in the Corporate might developed by this country and felt respect for those “Captains of Industry” who had risen to such wealth. This changed for awhile when the “Great Depression” of 1929 ravaged the country and the blinders were lifted off a majority of the people, allowing them to see that the Depression was the fault of these avaricious Plutocrats manipulating our system. As the generation of the Depression aged, those memories of the “hard times” remained vivid. Those memories were passed onto the next generation, of which I was a part. As the years passed though, the memory of the experiences of the “Great Depression” grew dim. Television became the dominant media and Television was always a carefully controlled expression of the views of the Corporations who owned it and the Corporate sponsors that supported it. The Cold War was used to scare our country and pouring half of our national income into the military was not allowed to be questioned, lest one be branded as a traitor. The tables have turned now and it seems that there really are people who could easily be labeled as traitors to this country, only these traitors aren’t some mangy radicals, but those who are the wealthiest and most powerful among us. “Revolt of the Rich” by Mike Lofgren examines this phenomenon:
“It was 1993, during congressional debate over the North American Free Trade Agreement. I was having lunch with a staffer for one of the rare Republican congressmen who opposed the policy of so-called free trade. To this day, I remember something my colleague said: “The rich elites of this country have far more in common with their counterparts in London, Paris, and Tokyo than with their fellow American citizens.”
That was only the beginning of the period when the realities of outsourced manufacturing, financialization of the economy, and growing income disparity started to seep into the public consciousness, so at the time it seemed like a striking and novel statement.” http://www.theamericanconservative.com/articles/revolt-of-the-rich/
Lofgren goes on to talk about the fact that at the end of the Cold War, many saw the coming decline of the Nation State as many areas would devolve into smaller units representing ethnic, religious and racial ties. Then too he says there were alternate theories that saw the large military powers helpless in the face of local unrest, as we have seen in Iraq and Afghanistan. What wasn’t discussed or foreseen was this:
“There have been numerous books about globalization and how it would eliminate borders. But I am unaware of a well-developed theory from that time about how the super-rich and the corporations they run would secede from the nation state.
I do not mean secession by physical withdrawal from the territory of the state, although that happens from time to time—for example, Erik Prince, who was born into a fortune, is related to the even bigger Amway fortune, and made yet another fortune as CEO of the mercenary-for-hire firm Blackwater, moved his company (renamed Xe) to the United Arab Emirates in 2011. What I mean by secession is a withdrawal into enclaves, an internal immigration, whereby the rich disconnect themselves from the civic life of the nation and from any concern about its well being except as a place to extract loot.”
Lofgren goes on to describe how the super wealthy see themselves above it all even while they may live among us in a vague geographical manner. Anyone who has gone to places that are known haunts of the rich and “fabulous” knows how the gated communities and the private beaches, keep us riffraff far away from the natural treasures of these “spa” areas had that originally drawn people on vacation. Even in Las Vegas, that most “egalitarian” of Cities (if you have the cash), you are precluded from seeing the really wealthy gamble, or amuse themselves.
“Our plutocracy now lives like the British in colonial India: in the place and ruling it, but not of it. If one can afford private security, public safety is of no concern; if one owns a Gulfstream jet, crumbling bridges cause less apprehension—and viable public transportation doesn’t even show up on the radar screen. With private doctors on call and a chartered plane to get to the Mayo Clinic, why worry about Medicare?
Being in the country but not of it is what gives the contemporary American super-rich their quality of being abstracted and clueless. Perhaps that explains why Mitt Romney’s regular-guy anecdotes always seem a bit strained. I discussed this with a radio host who recounted a story about Robert Rubin, former secretary of the Treasury as well as an executive at Goldman Sachs and CitiGroup. Rubin was being chauffeured through Manhattan to reach some event whose attendees consisted of the Great and the Good such as himself. Along the way he encountered a traffic jam, and on arriving to his event—late—he complained to a city functionary with the power to look into it. “Where was the jam?” asked the functionary. Rubin, who had lived most of his life in Manhattan, a place of east-west numbered streets and north-south avenues, couldn’t tell him. The super-rich who determine our political arrangements apparently inhabit another, more refined dimension.”
Lofgren goes on to discuss how in the past some of this was also true, but he then illustrates using the examples of public education and the military, to differentiate the alienation from our nation felt by the super-rich:
“To some degree the rich have always secluded themselves from the gaze of the common herd; their habit for centuries has been to send their offspring to private schools. But now this habit is exacerbated by the plutocracy’s palpable animosity towards public education and public educators, as Michael Bloomberg has demonstrated. To the extent public education “reform” is popular among billionaires and their tax-exempt foundations, one suspects it is as a lever to divert the more than $500 billion dollars in annual federal, state, and local education funding into private hands—meaning themselves and their friends. What Halliburton did for U.S. Army logistics, school privatizers will do for public education. A century ago, at least we got some attractive public libraries out of Andrew Carnegie. Noblesse oblige like Carnegie’s is presently lacking among our seceding plutocracy.
In both world wars, even a Harvard man or a New York socialite might know the weight of an army pack. Now the military is for suckers from the laboring classes whose sub-prime mortgages you just sliced into CDOs and sold to gullible investors in order to buy your second Bentley or rustle up the cash to get Rod Stewart to perform at your birthday party. The sentiment among the super-rich towards the rest of America is often one of contempt rather than noblesse.
Stephen Schwarzman, the hedge fund billionaire CEO of the Blackstone Group who hired Rod Stewart for his $5-million birthday party, believes it is the rabble who are socially irresponsible. Speaking about low-income citizens who pay no income tax, he says: “You have to have skin in the game. I’m not saying how much people should do. But we should all be part of the system.”
But millions of Americans who do not pay federal income taxes do pay federal payroll taxes. These taxes are regressive, and the dirty little secret is that over the last several decades they have made up a greater and greater share of federal revenues. In 1950, payroll and other federal retirement contributions constituted 10.9 percent of all federal revenues. By 2007, the last “normal” economic year before federal revenues began falling, they made up 33.9 percent. By contrast, corporate income taxes were 26.4 percent of federal revenues in 1950. By 2007 they had fallen to 14.4 percent. So who has skin in the game?”
Honestly, I found the entirety of this article absolutely stunning in its comprehension and comprehensiveness. This is so much more impressive because it is written by a man with impeccable conservative credentials, who was a Republican Congressional staffer among other things. There is so rich a detailing of what has become of most elected Republicans and Conservatives in this country as they became handmaidens to the Plutocratic Elite. This Elite as a group no longer feels connected to the citizens of this country and indeed views them as hindrances, product consumers and/or chattel. Please follow the link above and read the entire article, because wherever you stand on the political spectrum, I think you will find it lays out quite a powerful argument that the Plutocrats are in fact no longer a part, or part of, what we like to think is the American Dream. I will leave you with this:
“This raises disturbing questions for those who call themselves conservatives. Almost all conservatives who care to vote congregate in the Republican Party. But Republican ideology celebrates outsourcing, globalization, and takeovers as the glorious fruits of capitalism’s “creative destruction.” As a former Republican congressional staff member, I saw for myself how GOP proponents of globalized vulture capitalism, such as Grover Norquist, Dick Armey, Phil Gramm, and Lawrence Kudlow, extolled the offshoring and financialization process as an unalloyed benefit. They were quick to denounce as socialism any attempt to mitigate its impact on society. Yet their ideology is nothing more than an upside-down utopianism, an absolutist twin of Marxism. If millions of people’s interests get damaged in the process of implementing their ideology, it is a necessary outcome of scientific laws of economics that must never be tampered with, just as Lenin believed that his version of materialist laws were final and inexorable.
If a morally acceptable American conservatism is ever to extricate itself from a pseudo-scientific inverted Marxist economic theory, it must grasp that order, tradition, and stability are not coterminous with an uncritical worship of the Almighty Dollar, nor with obeisance to the demands of the wealthy. Conservatives need to think about the world they want: do they really desire a social Darwinist dystopia?
The objective of the predatory super-rich and their political handmaidens is to discredit and destroy the traditional nation state and auction its resources to themselves. Those super-rich, in turn, aim to create a “tollbooth” economy, whereby more and more of our highways, bridges, libraries, parks, and beaches are possessed by private oligarchs who will extract a toll from the rest of us. Was this the vision of the Founders? Was this why they believed governments were instituted among men—that the very sinews of the state should be possessed by the wealthy in the same manner that kingdoms of the Old World were the personal property of the monarch?”
Despite my protestations to the contrary, many here through the years have seen me as a raging “Liberal”. I don’t believe that specific economic, political or philosophical theory has all the answers.
My ideals as such only call for a free society that has eliminated poverty and want. I want a society where people are not barred from reaching their utmost potential. Where people can believe, speak and act with freedom from fear of repression, or retribution. In reading Mike Lofgren’s detailed analysis, I find my views are quite close to his. Perhaps in the way he seems to see it, I’m his kind of “true Conservative” after all. I do believe in a market economy, but I also believe that government should have oversight of the “Market” to ensure that it is not co-opted by those who would rig the game. Government is also responsible for infrastructure and protecting us from those who would exploit us by selling inferior and harmful products. Government should handle public education, not “for profit” corporations, or “non-profit” foundations set up by billionaires who are subtly pushing their product and their mindset. Finally Government should be responsible for ensuring the public welfare and ensure that the people have adequate food, shelter and income, so that we don’t have a society where homeless people, many of them military veterans, are left to languish unaided. What do you think? Are these “radical” ideas deviating from our Constitution, or merely a modernization of the Conservative intent of our nation’s Founding Fathers?
Submitted by: Mike Spindell, guest blogger
http://jonathanturley.org/2012/11/10/selling-out-middle-class-america/
http://jonathanturley.org/2012/10/13/manipulated-america-one-theory-of-how-they-control-us/
http://jonathanturley.org/2012/10/06/american-dream-not-american-reality/
http://jonathanturley.org/2012/09/30/portents-of-the-new-feudalism/
http://jonathanturley.org/2012/07/07/mythology-and-the-new-feudalism/
http://jonathanturley.org/2012/05/05/what-the/
http://jonathanturley.org/2012/03/17/a-real-history-of-the-last-sixty-two-years/
http://jonathanturley.org/2012/03/10/what-motivates-the-1/
http://jonathanturley.org/2011/12/18/forget-wall-street-occupy-corporate-boardrooms/
http://jonathanturley.org/2011/12/17/is-the-american-left-ineffective-in-economics-2/
“He described the psychological makeup of these people. They would miss appointments, without regard to whether it was important or not, but just have their secretary pay full price for the missed session. The feelings of entitlement were there. They appeared to have no ability to understand there were people who had to worry about money. If the subject of people being homeless or without transportation came up, kids of the super rich had a simple solution: “Well, if they don’t have a house or car, they should go buy one.”
OS,
I haven’t read the book, but my personal experience as a Psychotherapist confirms it. While I didn’t have any super-rich patients, I did have rich patients and yes their sense of entitlement was large, in the manner explained above. It is actually one of the reasons I gave up doing therapy.
Also I still remember my wealthy friend from high school. One day with my car loaded and embarking on a 200 mile round trip to Montauk Point, I asked my friends to chip in for gas money. This one friend, the richest of the lot looked at me surprised and said “Why doesn’t your father get you a credit card like I have?”. I was astonished. My father never could have gotten a credit card for himself, much less give one to me. My friend had no idea of the fact that his life was atypical.
OS:
and if we had a free market, Mr. Sams children would have had to work to keep it.
At the beginning of the 20th century [when we had as close to a free market as we were going to get] they used to say rags to riches to rags in 3 generations. I dont know why people dont understand that a free market is egalitarian at the same time it is merit based. No matter how humble people may be, they can rise.
You make it so the rich have to stay on top of their game to keep money in the family and it is better for all of us. What we have now is some sort of English aristocracy bullsh*t.
Sam Walton’s children couldnt start and run Wal Mart now if their lives depended on it.
Blouse,
She’s always been my hero… Or heroin….
“Mike Spindell:
you know why? Because we do not have laissez faire. The really rich use government to squash competition just like they did before Gibbons v. Ogden.”
Bron,
While I thank you for the link leading to Lofgren’s article, I would really suggest you re-read it because I don’t think you fully understood it. If the Elite feel as Lofgren says they do, laissez-faire Capitalism is exactly what they want. Unfetter government regulation of their dealings and within a trice we will see a world of monopolized industries controlling each segment of each market, with no incentive to innovate or change, only to increase profits.
AY,
Pointy-head maybe 😉
http://www.applecrumbles.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/09/conehead.jpg
rafflaw 1, March 2, 2013 at 11:48 am
Dredd,
the infection is evidenced by the concept of too big to fail and too big to jail.
============================================
Indeed.
And let’s add to the modern adage “follow the money” another adage: “follow the immunity.”
Quite telling that they end up at the same place eventually: Plutocracy.
Thoughtful and timely article. I see my state becoming more be holding to the wealthy than to the majority. I live in Texas and see how cutting school budgets has become a way to ensure the failure of public education and give state money to charter and private schools. I believe this push is strictly to enlarge the fortunes of the wealthy! The Texas legislature no longer works for the people of Texas but to be re-elected. The money has to be taken out of politics or we will be another grand failed experiment as a country!
Mike,
I have not had time to read for detail, but am bookmarking so I can come back and digest this slowly. Again, you have hit a home run.
You may have seen this book; years ago a therapist wrote about doing psychotherapy with children of the super rich. I cannot remember if it was a psychologist or psychiatrist. He described the psychological makeup of these people. They would miss appointments, without regard to whether it was important or not, but just have their secretary pay full price for the missed session. The feelings of entitlement were there. They appeared to have no ability to understand there were people who had to worry about money. If the subject of people being homeless or without transportation came up, kids of the super rich had a simple solution: “Well, if they don’t have a house or car, they should go buy one.”
We see that with the Walton family. Sam Walton started out with a small variety store in northwest Arkansas. I remember the first Walmart I ever went in. My late mother in law shopped there. It was small and about like a dollar store at the time. One thing I noticed. The staff were more helpful than any store I had ever been in, and there were signs to let you know everything in the store was “Made in America.” At that time, there probably were no more than a couple of dozen Walmart stores, and all of them were in Arkansas.
Sam Walton drove his 1977 Dodge pickup truck everywhere, even after Walmart became a multinational powerhouse. He could have bought any car made in the world and paid cash for it, but he did not want to waste money on something he didn’t need. He preferred jeans, a plaid shirt and a “feed store” baseball cap. He got his hair cut at a local barbershop he had been using back when he was running his single small store. He bought a Cessna twin engine airplane he used to fly around to his stores. He flew himself according to a story I read an an aviation magazine.
Back when I lived in Mississippi, Sam’s Clubs were just taking hold. A Sam’s Club store opened in Jackson (the state capitol), and Mr. Sam himself came to cut the ribbon. The Governor and Mayor came. Sam Walton was dressed like his customers. No Armani suits for him. He seemed to enjoy visiting with the regular folks more than with the dignitaries.
Sam Walton’s kids and grandkids are another story altogether. They were born feeling entitled. That is just a single example of how one wealthy family evolved. That story has played out all over the world.
Blouise,
I think you’re right in point….
Mike Spindell:
you know why? Because we do not have laissez faire. The really rich use government to squash competition just like they did before Gibbons v. Ogden.
If you didnt know, Cornelius Vanderbilt was an up and coming steamship captain who was trying to compete against government granted steamship concessions in New York. I might add that the rich and powerful were using government back then as well. Thomas Gibbons and Cornelius Vanderbilt were partners and wanted the freedom to compete.
As we all know Vanderbilt went on to make a huge fortune but he made it possible for the poor to ride in a steamship. Just like Rockefeller made a fortune but made it possible for the poor to light their houses for pennies vs the expensive whale oil. He probably also saved whales from extinction.
What we have now is a mixed economy that is very heavily influenced by government to the detriment of the common man.
What we need is government out of economics and a return to the ruff and tumble of the free market. That will do more to knock the Koch’s off their pedestal than almost any single thing you can do short of nationalizing their business. But that would turn America into a ghetto overnight, the rich would run like hell and take their money with them.
Personally, if I was rich in this climate, I would have no assets in the US. They would have been sold in 2009 at a loss if necessary and moved to safe havens.
You are never going to hurt the rich, so why not help the rest of the people by making it easy to create and keep wealth?
Dredd,
the infection is evidenced by the concept of too big to fail and too big to jail.
Mike S,
True American history is quite interesting.
Nevertheless, it seems like science fiction to those who have been saturated with the propaganda form of American history.
I was reading one of the early works of Professor Prosser, Prosser on Torts, specifically one of the sections on affirmative defenses, which included the defense which only governments can raise when they hurt their own people.
It is called “sovereign immunity.”
Professor Prosser, expressed his puzzlement and amazement at the development of this “affirmative defense.”
He could not fathom how the American people could allow this infection of the old “the king can do no wrong” virus to make its way across the Atlantic from England and reinfect America.
Parasites make up about 1% of the microbial world, as they do in our American Plutocracy.
The 1% among us are parasites and they take no concern whatsoever that what they are doing will destroy their host, an consequently themselves — at least as far as they are members of American society.
Hence, the indications in the Lofgren article (and Mike S’s comments on it in his post) that the 1% are not really of us even though they are in us (like any pathogenic parasitic virus).
Anyway, so I don’t write a comment that is too long, have you noticed any sovereign immunity lately?
Like the banksters, the war criminals, and in short those with the big bucks?
The next virus that mutates once the sovereign immunity virus takes hold is the state secret virus.
Noticed how the Supreme Court said last week that government is immune from inquiry into who they have wiretapped with a secret warrant or no warrant at all?
The nation is infected with something that cannot be voted out of office.
Great article Swarthmore. The numbers are staggering.
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/03/sunday-review/the-holocaust-just-got-more-shocking.html?pagewanted=all Thought you might be interested in this ,Mike, since you have been in discussions with the holocaust deniers that have been posting here. I see that Swartzman made another 213 million this year.
Wow! Disengaging from the boob tube and popular magazines re-calibrates the critical thinking process. It becomes easier to pull back the curtain and view the naked wizard. Sadly, you can offer the view on a silver plate and the current masses still think it is Greek math.
If one takes Mike’s, Mark’s, and Nal’s articles this morning as a whole one can get a sense of the over riding problem the wealthy and entitled are facing … how to keep the rabble at bay.
“Finally Government should be responsible for ensuring the public welfare and ensure that the people have adequate food, shelter and income, so that we don’t have a society where homeless people, many of them military veterans, are left to languish unaided.” Mike Spindell
Agreed. And I would include access to basic healthcare in that list.
Documentary ‘A Place At The Table’ Is A Call To Action On Hunger
by Allison Aubrey
March 01, 2013 6:09 PM
http://www.npr.org/blogs/thesalt/2013/03/01/172040074/documentary-a-place-at-the-table-is-a-call-to-action-on-hunger
Fantastic job Mike. I agree that this country has become a servant to the wealthy and the corporations. They own many politicians in both parties as well as the Supreme Court. I do not expect a change until Citizens United is overturned and private money is taken out of politics.
I don’t think it matters where it come from or what political party it belongs to. I think it matters that it makes sense for us as a nation and a people. We don’t need to box ourselves in to something, let’s just allow ourselves to think for today.
On this earth no one is created exactly the same…. Each has a different entitlement than the other.. Or should it be phrased, expectation from life.
Excellent article Mike.